December 25, 2015   Christmas Readings
October 31, 2015   Halloween Readings
On Saturday - October 31st, 2015 - Hour 25 joined you to celebrate Halloween - a time to enjoy a good scare and celebrate the outre and otherworldly. So we're going to read you some classic horror stories while you decorate your Halloween Tree and get ready for the evening's festivities.
Tonight's stories will start with a tale of a ghostly encounter in Paris at a time when the guillotine stood ready to drink the blood of the virtuous and the venal. We'll move on to a story that has fun with the tropes of gothic romance. Then finally we'll go to the Pacific Ocean where a newly risen island brings us a nightmare from the imagination of H. P. Lovecraft.
So close the drapes, light the candles and listen to some stories fit for a dark and stormy night brought to you by The Hour That Stretches.
The Tale of the German Student takes place in Paris during the infamous 'reign of terror', when the French revolution took an especially violent tack and people - powerful or powerless, rich or poor, venal or virtuous - were given over to the guillotine. In this time of chaos a German student with a fragile mental state meets the woman of his dreams - only to find that the gap between dreams and nightmares can sometimes be vanishing small.
Once a genre has become established with tropes and other standard fare then it does not take long before someone parodies it. That is what Bret Harte does with tonight's story, Selina Sedilia. In this he takes on the gothic romance by sending up all of its tropes and cliches, turning it into a Halloween laugh fest. |
So feel free to have a good laugh at this hilarious satire of gothic romances. Halloween's not just the time for a good scare - it's a time for a good laugh.
Our final story for tonight is Dagon by H. P. Lovecraft. Lovecraft is widely acknowledged as a master of the horror genre. His stories scare us at a level that goes beyond the frights created by stories and movies that focus on gore and dismemberment.
It has been said that 'conventional' horror stories derive their frightfulness from some horrific element that intrudes into our life and that at the end of the story - once the 'monster' has been vanquished - then everything returns to normal. But in a Lovecraft story the horror that we discover comes from the realization that 'placid normal life' is but an illusion and the horror that was discovered in the story isn't going to go away because it is, in fact, the reality of our existence.
Readers of Lovecraft will be familiar with Dagon since it played a part in his stories The Shadow Over Innsmouth and The Call of Cthulhu. In The Shadow Over Innsmouth we are introduced to The Esoteric Order of Dagon where humans collaborate with those unspeakable horrors from beneath the sea. And in The Call of Cthulhu Dagon gets mentioned as one of the dark forces working evil on the world. Also, in The Call of Cthulhu there is a mention of someone committing suicide by jumping out a window while Cthulhu's dreams create madness and chaos in the world. Remember that incident while you listen to this story.
Dagon was written in 1917 and appeared in the amateur magazine the Vagrant in November 1919. It was later published in the October 1923 issue of Weird Tales and marked Lovecraft's first appearance in the magazine that was to publish so much of his fiction.
Click here to listen to the entire show. {57:39}
Or
Click here for the show's intro music. {0:41}
Click here for the show's opening. {1:18}
Click here for Warren's reading of The Tale of the German Student by Washington Irving. {13:54}
Click here for Suzanne's reading of Selina Sedilia by Bret Harte. {22:08}
Click here for Warren's reading of Dagon by H.P. Lovecraft. {17:47}
Click here for the show's closing. {1:51}
For more Halloween readings and interviews you can listen to our shows from
2014,
2013,
2012,
2011,
2010,
2009,
2008,
2007,
2006,
2005,
2004,
2003,
2001 and
2000.
And to add some music to your holiday season you might want to listen to our show featuring holiday carols with a Lovecraftian twist.
Click here for links to all of the previous Shows that you can listen to on the Hour 25 Website.
Click here for our current show.
If you enjoyed this show and would like to know when other interviews are uploaded to the Hour 25 Website, then send an email to me at [email protected] and I will add your name to the free Hour 25 Newsletter mailing list. That way you'll get a brief notice in your email every time a new show gets uploaded to the web.
On Friday - December 25th, 2015 - Hour 25 joined you to celebrate Christmas - a time to enjoy the company of family and friends and celebrate kindness and charity.
You know, there's a long history of reading stories out loud on Christmas and many authors, such as Charles Dickens or Jerome K. Jerome, had a personal tradition of writing new Christmas stories each and every year and then sharing them with friends over the holidays. Today we're going to continue Hour 25's tradition of being a part of your holiday celebrations by reading you some Christmas stories with a touch of the fantastic.
So get some eggnog, start a fire in the hearth, trim the Christmas tree and settle in for a few minutes of Christmas magic brought to you by The Hour That Stretches.
Our first story for tonight is Their Dear Little Ghost by Elia Wilkinson Peattie. This story tells us about a child so enchanting she can take you into fairyland. How could you possibly disappoint such a child a Christmastime? But a tragedy has struck and her parents and godmother learn the importance of cherishing the ones we love while they are with us.
The author of this poignant tale was an amazingly prolific author and hard working woman, despite growing up in a household with no books all and who had to leave school when she was thirteen to work in the family printing business.
She was born in 1862 in Kalamazoo Michigan and in 1883 married a reporter from the Chicago Tribune. She and her husband would stay up nights writing to supplement his reporter's salary. Her writing career took off and she became the first woman reporter for the Chicago Tribune, making her the second woman reporter in Chicago. By 1890 she had her own column and wrote about controversial issues of that time which often were in opposition to the views of many readers.
She produced more than 800 editorials, features and columns, and also wrote her own books, stories and plays. She once wrote 100 stories in 100 days to make ends meet and published over 5000 book reviews.
Like so many women, she wrote because she needed to help support her three children, a sister, mother-in-law and mother. She knew that if there was going to be a roof over their heads and food on the table, she'd better keep writing.
Here's a link to a site created by researchers at the University of Nebraska dedicated to "an Uncommon Woman who was an Uncommon Writer".
Our second story of the night comes to us from John Kendrick Bangs, an author who is well known for his ghost stories with a humorous or moral twist.
Last year we brought you a story of his wherein an author learned that accepting ghostly help with one's writing - especially for a Christmas ghost story that's late in being delivered to the editor - might not be a good idea.
This year J.K. Bangs is back with another story of an author who won't be able to deliver a promised Christmas ghost story to his editor. {I see a pattern here. I wonder if Bangs had difficulties making his deadlines?} The problem in this story is that the delinquent author can only write ghost stories based on his interactions with actual ghosts and they've all gone on strike because he offended their union boss.
So now we present to you a story of labor relations, authorial misadventures and holiday magic.
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I'll never forget Christmas Eve 1968 - when I went outside on a cold winter's night and looked up at the Moon, shining over snow and Christmas lights, and realized that at that very moment three men from Earth were circling that world. This proved that the Moon was not just a place for science fiction dreams but a real place just waiting for discovery and exploration. For a young man who had been dreaming of spaceflight for his whole life the inescapable reality of that moment was a dream come true.
So let us remember that as the crew of Apollo 8 orbited above our lifeless Moon that night, they looked back to see the Earth - a blue and green oasis floating against star filled blackness - and sent the world a Christmas greeting... the first ever from another world.
Back in the 1950's Galaxy Magazine had something of a tradition of publishing Christmas themed covers for their holiday season issues. While looking at them I was struck by the similarities between what Santa does and what engineers do when designing and flying missions to other planets.
First you must establish your mission requirements...
Next you must plan your mission...
Then you must travel through space whilst being careful to account for any mid-course encounters with other objects or spacecraft...
Upon reaching your destination you must carefully deploy your payloads...
And when your mission is completed you can sit down with friends and give a toast to a job well done.
Now go and enjoy the holidays with your family and friends. From all of us here at Hour 25, we wish you a very Merry Christmas and the happiest of New Years. And remember, when happiness comes to your party, be sure to give it a comfortable seat.
Click here to listen to the entire show. {51:00}
Or
Click here for the show's intro music. {0:41}
Click here for the show's opening. {1:05}
Click here for Suzanne's reading of Their Dear Little Ghost by Elia W. Peattie. {17:32}
Click here for Warren's reading of The Amalgamated Brotherhood of Spooks by John Kendrick Bangs. {26:13}
Click here for a Christmas greeting from the Moon. {2:50}
Click here for the show's closing. {2:39}
For more Christmas readings you can listen to our shows from
2014,
2013,
2012,
2010,
2009,
2008,
2007,
2006,
2005,
2004,
2003,
2002 and
2001.
And to add some music to your holiday season you might want to listen to our show featuring Christmas carols with a Lovecraftian twist.
Click here for links to all of the previous Shows that you can listen to on the Hour 25 Website.
If you enjoyed this show and would like to know when other interviews are uploaded to the Hour 25 Website, then send an email to me at [email protected] and I will add your name to the free Hour 25 Newsletter mailing list. That way you'll get a brief notice in your email every time a new show gets uploaded to the web.
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